Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 2. On His Own and Others’ Poetry
Section 1. On His Poetry and Poetic Method
Comments on Some Remarks by a Critic
[2]
The Mendonça letter [of
4 May 1947] was to be, as I suggested, “between ourselves”; there is too
much that is private and personal in it for publicity. It is something that can
be shown to those who can appreciate and understand, but to an ordinary reader I
might seem to be standing on my defence rather than attacking and demolishing a
criticism which might damage the appreciation of it in readers who are not sure
of their own critical standard and reliability of their taste and so might be
shaken by well-phrased judgments and plausible reasonings such as Mendonça’s:
they might make the same confusion as Mendonça himself between an apology and an
apologia. An idea might rise that I am not sure of the value of my own poetry
especially the earlier poetry and accept his valuation of it. The humility you
speak of is very largely a Socratic humility, the element of irony in it is
considerable; but readers not accustomed to fineness of shades might take it
literally and conclude wrongly that I accepted the strictures passed by an
unfavourable criticism. A poet who puts no value or a very low value on his own
writing has no business to write poetry or to publish it or keep it in
publication; if I allowed the publication of the Collected Poems it is
because I judged them worth publishing. Kishor Gandhi’s objection has therefore
some value. On the other hand in defending I may seem to be eulogising my own
work, which is not a thing that can be done in public even if a poet’s estimate
of his achievement is as self-assured as that of Horace, Exegi monumentum
aere perennius, or as magnificent as Victor Hugo’s. Similarly, the reply was
not meant for Mendonça himself and I do not think the whole can be shown to him
without omissions or some editing, but if you wish and if you think that he will
not resent any strictures I have made you can show to him the passages relevant
to his criticisms.
7 July 1947